I tried, but that store didnt change my order status for 3 days, so I cancelled the order... once i poked around their site and saw they also sold knives and women's shoes, I really didnt get the warm fuzzies.

Newegg only had the Zotac... so I'm praying i can hit ~180Mhz bclk on the board so I can at least get the chip to 3.8Ghz range on a 21x multi.

I was a hair away from pulling the trigger on an SB build. But $400 during the holidays is just a bit too much...

This build is SILENT - you have to put your ear to the case to hear the hiss of the 570 and the H50 pump. I used a Scythe Kama flow 2 fan that is great with static pressure and spins at max of about 1300RPM (i have it controlled by the MB for temps). This thing at full load barely makes a noise.

the GTX-570 Does dual monitors Flawlessly... i have this hooked up to our 47" flatscreen and my monitor. It plays movies/netflix (soon to be bluray) while I am gaming on the other monitor - we were watching TRON with the HDMI audio from the GTX570 and I was playing Skyrim last night flawlessly on my headphones from the same machine. Great driver options too to resize desktop and eliminate noise.

Videocard cooling: This is awesome - this case keeps the card super frosty, as long as you dont use the stupid little attachment that comes with it, and use the positive pressure system as it negatively impacts VC cooling in favor of CPU cooling.

Love the way this case looks.

Now for what I didnt like:

Overclocking - the board only goes to a bclk of 159 before going ballistic.

CPU/Chipset cooling - this case would need some heavy mods to sustain high CPU overclocks - my undervolted system runs great, but the chipset temperatures are on the higher side - 48C for chipset and 30-64C (idle-linpack) on CPU load with the overclocked/undervolted chip and the slow fan.

Stock airflow design uses positive pressure, which is a HUGE mistake in my experimentation. Yes, it will lower the CPU temps a little at first, but overall it will turn the box into an EZbake oven - at least this is true with quiet, low RPM fans (read: HTPC fans) since they don't generate enough pressure to fully overcome the restrictiveness of the case, and eventually serve the purpose of keeping the hot air in.

The adapter needed to hook a slimline DVD up to a mini-ITX board is not included in the case. This was quite disappointing. You would think for a $200 case, they could throw that in.

Tips and tricks:

If using an H60, twist the tubes in a spiral, like a spring, when putting the system in, so there is no strain on the pump.